Iraq Unit Refuses Risky Mission
19-Member Unit Refuses To Make Dangerous Fuel Delivery
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Iraq Unit Refuses Mission
A unit of U.S. forces in Iraq refused a risky mission saying they had inadequate supplies and protection. They could face court-martial for mutiny, David Martin reports.
-
Video
Fallujah Under Fire
The U.S. unleashed waves of attacks in Fallujah in an effort to drive out terror mastermind Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The city's clerics insist he's not there, Allen Pizzey reports.
-
Video
Quints Born To Wounded GI
A wounded marine sergeant became the new father of quintuplets soon after sustaining injuries in Iraq. He's recovering in Maryland and hopes to soon meet his new family, Sharyl Attkisson reports.
-
-
Photo
A U.S. soldier takes position next to a burning military supply truck in the western part of Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, Oct 14, 2004. (AP)
-
Photo
The 343rd Quartermasters Company drives fuel supply trucks like this one. (CBS)
-
Photo
Patricia McCook describes what her husband told me of the unit's decision to refuse the fuel supply mission. (CBS)
-
-
Interactive
Battle For Iraq
The government, the insurgency, key players, background and photos.
-
Interactive
Held Hostage
Details on foreign workers and soldiers captured by insurgents in Iraq.
-
News Tools
Prison Charges
Here are the official documents detailing charges in some Iraq prison cases.
In one case that is still under investigation, members of a U.S. Army logistical unit may have rejected an order they considered too dangerous.
With many of Iraq's major roads turned into shooting galleries, 19 members of an Army reserve unit are under investigation for refusing an order to deliver a convoy of fuel trucks, reports CBS National Security Correspondent David Martin.
One of the members of the unit, Sgt. Larry O. McCook, told his wife they refused to go because the trucks they were driving weren't adequately protected.
"They don't have bulletproof protection on the vehicles, they just don't go fast at all. It's just not safe to be in a hostile territory,'' said Patricia McCook, relaying her husband's words.
Other soldiers told their families the fuel they were supposed to deliver was contaminated and there was no point in undertaking the dangerous drive.
Amber McClenny left this message on her mother's answering machine.
"Hi Mom, this is Amber. This is a real, real big emergency. I need you to contact someone. I mean raise pure hell. We yesterday, we refused to go on a convoy to Taji. That is above Baghdad. We had broken down trucks, non-armored vehicles and we were carrying contaminated fuel. They are holding us against our will. We are now prisoners."
This is the first known incident of a unit refusing to carry out a mission in Iraq. The soldiers have now been released and told that depending on their attitude, they could either get off with a reprimand or be court-martialed for mutiny.
They belong to the 343rd Quartermasters Company, a reserve unit of 120 soldiers which deployed from its home base in Rock Hill, S.C. last December. The unit now operates out of Tallil.
An e-mail from the command which runs the resupply mission in Iraq says the soldiers had some valid concerns, which Sgt. McCook told his wife are are being fixed.
"Right now they are having the vehicles technically inspected and they're going to put bulletproof armor on the vehicles," said Patricia McCook.
The lack of armor on trucks and humvees to protect soldiers in Iraq has been a long simmering problem which for one unit came to a head this week. Their commander calls it a temporary breakdown in discipline.
But the troubling question remains: are soldiers in Iraq beginning to think the mission is not worth the risk?
The Clarion-Ledger of Mississippi reported that U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., planned to submit a Congressional inquiry on behalf of the Mississippi soldiers to launch an investigation into whether they are being treated improperly.
"I would not want any member of the military to be put in a dangerous situation ill-equipped," Thompson told the newspaper. "I have had similar complaints from military families about vehicles that weren't armor-plated, or bullet-proof vests that are outdated. It concerns me because we made over $150 billion in funds available to equip our forces in Iraq.
İMMIV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Video and Galleries from CBS Evening News
- Latest in CBS Evening News
- The Story Behind the Skating Babies
- Sagging Sales, Even in a Beach Paradise
- Grief, Outrage over Grave Desecrations


